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State elections board ordered to certify Riggs winner | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-05-06 07:57:00

(The Center Square) – With seven days available for appeal, a federal judge on Monday evening ordered the North Carolina State Board of Elections to certify Allison Riggs the winner over Jefferson Griffin in the election for eight years in Seat 6 of the state Supreme Court

Chief Justice Richard Myers, presiding in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina Western Division, said the state board “shall not take any action in furtherance of the North Carolina Court of Appeals and Supreme Court’s orders.” Griffin, the Republican challenger and a justice on the state’s appellate court, was denied motions for injunctive relief.

This is the nation’s last unresolved election, one that drew in $2.3 million in campaign donations. The filing says, “The court’s order is stayed for 7 days, so that Judge Griffin may pursue an appeal if he so chooses.” At the time of ruling, Monday marked 182 days since Election Day.

On Election Night, with 2,658 precincts reporting, Griffin led Riggs by 9,851 votes of 5,540,090 cast. Provisional and absentee ballots that qualified were added to the totals since, swinging the race by 10,585 votes.

Riggs has been poised for a 734-vote win. Griffin protested about 65,000 ballots on multiple counts, and the state board rejected all of them. Most were by 3-2 party-line votes.

Board of elections decisions and court rulings – Wake County Superior Court, state Court of Appeals and Supreme Court, and 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals – had pared that initial number down to somewhere between 1,675 and 5,700 for this decision by Myers.

The protests the state board denied included registration records of voters, such as lack of providing either a driver’s license number or the last four digits of a Social Security number.

Other ballots protested and denied by the state board included voters overseas who have never lived in the United States, and for lack of photo identification provided with military and overseas voters. Myers’ ruling is the final blow to these protests.

Griffin is trying to become the sixth Republican in a row to win a seat on the state’s Supreme Court. Democrats held a 6-1 edge going into the 2020 election and lost three state Supreme Court races, reducing their advantage to 4-3. In 2022, Republicans won both races to gain their 5-2 majority.

The Supreme Court bench has historically been both nonpartisan and partisan. The General Assembly, under majority Democrats, changed the bench to nonpartisan for the 2004 election cycle; Republicans, in majority, changed it back after the 2016 election cycle.

Riggs has been recused from all actions involving the state Supreme Court. She remains seated until the election is resolved. Griffin is a judge on the state Court of Appeals and has been recused from all actions there as well.

Riggs is trying to win her first judicial election and as an incumbent no less, appointed by then-Gov. Roy Cooper nine months after he had appointed her to the Court of Appeals following her 14-year stint with the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.

Griffin earned his eight-year seat on the appellate bench with a 2020 win over Democrat Chris Brook. He had lost two years earlier to Toby Hampson in a three-way race that included two Republicans.

The post State elections board ordered to certify Riggs winner | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents a factual report on the ongoing legal and electoral proceedings surrounding the North Carolina State Supreme Court Seat 6 election. It outlines the judicial orders, vote counts, ballot challenges, and historical context of party control without using language that favors either the Democratic or Republican side. The tone remains neutral, focusing on procedural developments without editorializing or displaying an ideological stance. The content reports on the positions and actions of the involved parties but does not promote a specific viewpoint, adhering to objective and balanced reporting.

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Federal lawsuit alleges abuse, exploitation of teen at Asheville Academy for Girls, Trails Carolina • Asheville Watchdog

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avlwatchdog.org – ANDREW R. JONES – 2025-06-25 13:25:00


A South Carolina woman filed a 51-page lawsuit against Asheville Academy for Girls, its owner Family Help & Wellness, and 15 related entities, alleging abuse, sexual assault, forced labor, and false advertising during her 2016 treatment for anxiety and depression as a teen. The suit details severe mistreatment, including physical and sexual abuse, humiliation, and excessive labor at the North Carolina programs Trails Carolina and Asheville Academy. It accuses the defendants of knowingly employing unqualified, abusive staff and misleading families about treatment quality. The complaint follows suicides at Asheville Academy and a child’s homicide at Trails Carolina, leading to program closures and fines for health violations.

A South Carolina woman has sued Asheville Academy for Girls, its owner and 15 other related programs and entities, alleging abuse, humiliation, sexual assault, forced labor and false advertising during her mental health treatment as a teen.

The 51-page lawsuit, filed June 20 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, seeks more than $75,000 in compensatory damages for the woman, who it identifies simply as R.B. 

It refers to two residents’ deaths by suicide in May at Asheville Academy and another in 2024 at Trails Carolina in Lake Toxaway. Both properties were owned by Family Help & Wellness, and through a series of rebranding and mergers, Asheville Academy for Girls and other Family Help & Wellness programs evolved into Asheville Academy by 2024.

R.B., a Greenville resident, was 14 when she entered Family Help & Wellness’ North Carolina programs in 2016 for treatment for anxiety and depression, according to the lawsuit.

She initially stayed more than two months at Trails Carolina then transferred to Asheville Academy for Girls in Weaverville, according to the lawsuit, which alleges she experienced abuse and coercion at both programs. 

“R.B. was abused and humiliated; she was physically and sexually assaulted; she was forced to wear diapers and urinate on herself during long, arduous hikes in freezing cold and rain; and she was forced to perform commercial labor, cleaning kitchens, building stables, and laying railroad track,” the lawsuit states. “As to therapy, she got no more than an hour a week. What she got instead was untrained and unlicensed staff members punitively removing her access to food, water, and basic hygiene; commanding her not to speak; and shaming her into singing and dancing in front of her peers… .”

Family Help & Wellness did not respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit also alleges that Family Help & Wellness, which does business as Wilderness Training & Consulting, falsely advertised itself to R.B. and her parents, both before she became a resident at Trails Carolina and during her transition to Asheville Academy for Girls.

“Defendants marketed and sold AAG as the next step for R.B., convincing her and her parents that her treatment was not finished and that she would see no lasting benefit unless she enrolled for a long stay at AAG,” the lawsuit states.

The company knew its North Carolina programs had unqualified, abusive staff, the lawsuit alleges, and it had a responsibility to be transparent about that with R.B. and her family.

“Defendants knew well before 2016 that their staff had physically, emotionally, and sexually abused residents,” the lawsuit states. “From well before R.B. enrolled at Trails Carolina in late 2016, Defendants knew that its staff were unqualified to supervise, let alone treat, uniquely vulnerable students, like R.B.”

The lawsuit alleges all 17 defendants — which include Asheville Academy for Girls, Family Help & Wellness, Trails Carolina, Wilderness Training & Consulting, and others — were a “web of interconnected entities and investment entities that operated these facilities as profit centers while systematically failing to protect the children in their care.”

The lawsuit is the latest in a handful filed across North Carolina federal and local courts against Family Help & Wellness, which is based in Salem, Oregon.

Shortly after the deaths at Asheville Academy, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services suspended admissions at the Weaverville program. Days later, the facility removed residents and employees from the campus and voluntarily gave up its license.

Wilderness Training & Consulting was fined $45,000 for health and safety violations following the suicides, according to NCDHHS letters and a survey report issued June 5.

In February 2024, a 12-year-old boy died within 24 hours of arriving at Trails Carolina. An autopsy found the death was a homicide. Nocharges were filed, but the program lost its license and voluntarily closed months later.


Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments on this story, which has been republished on our Facebook page. Please submit your comments there.


Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Andrew R. Jones is a Watchdog investigative reporter. Email arjones@avlwatchdog.org. The Watchdog’s local reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.

Original article

The post Federal lawsuit alleges abuse, exploitation of teen at Asheville Academy for Girls, Trails Carolina • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article primarily focuses on investigative reporting of alleged abuses within mental health treatment programs, highlighting systemic failures and corporate negligence. The tone is critical of profit-driven practices at the expense of vulnerable youth, which aligns with themes often emphasized by Center-Left perspectives on accountability, regulation, and social justice. However, the article refrains from overt ideological language or partisan framing, maintaining a mostly factual and issue-focused approach. The emphasis on institutional critique and vulnerability of minors suggests a slight tilt toward progressive concerns without strongly partisan rhetoric.

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Trump escalates pushback on early Pentagon analysis of Iran damage

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www.youtube.com – ABC11 – 2025-06-25 12:26:37


SUMMARY: President Trump defended the U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities, claiming it destroyed Iran’s nuclear program “to kingdom come.” However, a preliminary Pentagon report revealed that at least two nuclear sites were not destroyed, with centrifuges intact and much enriched uranium spared because it was moved before the strike. The bombing sealed off entrances but didn’t damage underground structures. Trump disputed these findings, insisting the strike was rapid and devastating. He also disclosed Iran warned the U.S. military base in Qatar before launching attacks. NATO’s secretary general defended Trump amid his blunt remarks on Russia and Iran’s long conflict.

He claimed “fake news” reports on the damage assessment demean the B-2 pilots.

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NCDOT works to protect road crews from dangerous heat

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www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-06-25 09:19:15


SUMMARY: NCDOT road crews face dangerous triple-digit heat while continuing construction across North Carolina. To prevent heat illnesses like heat exhaustion and heat stroke—which have caused over 30 worker deaths annually since 2003—the department adjusts work schedules to cooler parts of the day and provides loose cotton long sleeves, chilled bandanas, steel-toed boots, frequent AC breaks, and training to monitor heat stress. Drivers are urged to exercise caution in work zones. Meanwhile, Wake County is extending cooling stations through June 30 at public libraries, regional centers, and health services to help residents beat the heat.

Construction workers across the Triangle are braving extreme heat as temperatures soar into triple digits this week, presenting significant health risks.

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